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Published January 13, 2015
This partial transcript of The Beltway Boys, Feb. 16, was provided by the Federal Document Clearing House. Click here to order the complete transcript.
MORT KONDRACKE, CO-HOST: All right, let's go to the Ups and Downs.
Up: Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf
KONDRACKE: Up, Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf. Musharraf gets a lot more than just President Bush's thanks for his help in the war on terror. Musharraf got $220 million in U.S. aid and could get more that – later this year.
FRED BARNES, CO-HOST: Could, will.
KONDRACKE: Could, would. I want to play you something that is absolutely hilarious from a little – not, not too very much long ago.
BARNES: All right.
KONDRACKE: Watch this.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP, NOVEMBER 3, 1999)
BUSH: ... the new Pakistani general, he's just been elected, he's a - - not elected, this guy took over office. He appears he's going to bring stability to the country, and I think that's good news for the subcontinent.
UNIDENTIFIED INTERVIEWER: And you can name him.
BUSH: General. I can name the general.
UNIDENTIFIED INTERVIEWER: And it's...
BUSH: General.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
KONDRACKE: He now knows that the guy's name...
BARNES: Yes, yes, right, right.
KONDRACKE: ... is Musharraf, and he knows a lot of other, (UNINTELLIGIBLE) other world leaders...
BARNES: He does.
KONDRACKE: ... and, you know, and, and, and, you know something? No more name tags.
BARNES: Yes, no, look, I mean, he really is in command. Look at the people. He's not only knows their names, but he's charmed and won over, Musharraf, Vladimir Putin, the Russian president – I mean, think of that – Vicente Fox, even Bill Clinton's best friend among foreign leaders, Tony Blair. So it's quite an achievement.
Down: the National Republican Senatorial Committee
BARNES: I'm going to move on to the next up-and-down, happens to be a down, and the down goes to the National Republican Senatorial Committee. The campaign committee goes over the top in its recent TV ad by including President Bush, who's been stressing unity during the war, in an attack ad. Watch this ad.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP, NATIONAL REPUBLICAN SENATORIAL COMMITTEE AD)
ANNOUNCER: When times are tough, Americans unite. We put aside our differences and do what's best for the nation. It's why President Bush and moderate Democrats reached a compromise plan to get South Dakota back to work.
BUSH: Lot of people have lost their jobs and don't have health care...
ANNOUNCER: But sadly, partisan Democrats like Tim Johnson voted against that compromise.
BUSH: There's something more important than politics, and that's to do our jobs.
ANNOUNCER: We agree. Tell Tim Johnson it's time to do his job.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
BARNES: Here's my objection to that ad. Bush is a wartime president. He's pleaded for bipartisanship. He's actually shown a lot of bipartisanship in dealing with Congress, didn't intervene on campaign finance reform. He's not even backing his judicial nominee, Charles Pickering, much, hasn't done anything to help him, as I think he should. So he's been bipartisan there.
Why, when you're seeking that, go be star in an attack ad? Look, I don't have anything against the thrust of the ad, but the president being in it? I think that hurts his cause, doesn't help it.
KONDRACKE: Well, you know, the, the fact is that he's, he's presumed to be a uniter, not a divider.
BARNES: Yes, yes, right.
KONDRACKE: Well, here he is, is he really? What is he really? You know, this you – this ad had to have been approved at the White House...
BARNES: Sure.
KONDRACKE: ... otherwise they wouldn't have used Bush's.
BARNES: Right.
KONDRACKE: So if it's approved at the White House, that means that the president really isn't a uniter (UNINTELLIGIBLE), but he is a divider, and that undercuts his whole, his whole claim about, about his wartime presidency.
Furthermore, a lot of these – three of these, three of the...
BARNES: (UNINTELLIGIBLE) carried away.
KONDRACKE: ... senators against whom that ad was run voted for his tax cut package, and they voted for a, for a stimulus package, just not his. I...
BARNES: That's the only mistake he's made as a wartime president.
KONDRACKE: I agree.
Down: the Senate Commerce Committee
KONDRACKE: OK, down, the Senate Commerce Committee. To absolutely no one's surprise, for Enron CEO Ken Lay took the Fifth this week. But that didn't stop members of the Senate Commerce Committee from passing up a golden opportunity to grandstand as much as they could. Check this.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIPS)
U.S. SENATOR ERNEST HOLLINGS (D), SOUTH CAROLINA: There's no better example that Kenny Boy than cash-and-carry government.
U.S. SENATOR PETER FITZGERALD (R), ILLINOIS: Mr. Lay, I'd say you were a carnival barker, except that wouldn't be fair to carnival barkers. A carnie will at least tell you up front that he's running a shell game.
U.S. SENATOR JOHN KERRY (D), MASSACHUSETTS: I regret very deeply – we're all reduced to these opening statements, which are – have their own sense of futility, because questions won't be answered, because the truth will not be forthcoming today.
(END VIDEO CLIPS)
BARNES: You know, I found all that stuff appalling, this piling-on by these senatorial midgets. Ken Lay faces a criminal investigation, he faces an extremely hostile and unfriendly press corps, and now he gets this moral preening from these members of the Senate Commerce Committee. The press plays a role here.
You know, the press – where has been the watchdog press holding Senator Hollings accountable for all the things he said, saying all these members of the Bush administration had gotten Enron money when they hadn't? Where was the press, Mort?
KONDRACKE: We were right here.
BARNES: (UNINTELLIGIBLE)...
KONDRACKE: We were right here, yes.
BARNES: No, but where's The Wall Street Journal and The New York Times, Roll Call?
KONDRACKE: I, I, I, I, I, I get your (UNINTELLIGIBLE).
BARNES: Yes.
KONDRACKE: Some of these guys got their comeuppance, not enough, when Sharron Watkins, the whistle-blower from, from Enron said that Ken Lay was not the monster that he's been portrayed as but just a dupe.
Up: Canadian ice skating pair Jamie Salé and David Pelletier
BARNES: All right. Here's a big one. Up, Canadian ice-skating pair Jamie Salé and David Pelletier. A French judge sparks a controversy when she says she was pressured into giving the gold medal to the Russians, but the International Olympics Committee overturns the final standings and gives the Canadians the gold medal to share with the Russians.
KONDRACKE: Justice, justice done.
BARNES: Right.
KONDRACKE: This French judge has been kicked out, and now there's going to be an investigation leading to, I hope, real reform in the ice- skating movement.
BARNES: Yes.
KONDRACKE: So the judges somehow are shielded from national influences.
BARNES: We need reform of other judges as well. Now is the time to go back and give the U.S. the gold medal in 1972 in basketball that they were cheated out of by bad refs, bad judges. The Russians got it, and they shouldn't have. All right.
KONDRACKE: You've got a long memory, Fred...
(CROSSTALK)
BARNES: ... that grudge I bear, I still hold.
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